Last month the Sackler Insight hosted a contest to find the best science-based art (“sci-art”) at Sackler. All twelve entries were posted to the Sackler Graduate Student Council Instagram account (@SacklerGSC) and the Sackler student Facebook group. The winning contributor will receive a $25 Visa gift card!
The results are in! 174 voters from both Instagram and Facebook weighed in on their favorite pictures. Our lucky first place winner is Mary H. from Microbiology with her photo “An enteroid supernova,” which received 65 votes. Runners-up included Rana A. from PDD with “Making the best of a bad Western” (61 votes) and Rob C. from CMDB with “Monday Blues – Screening One-Bead-One-Compound Peptide Libraries” (39 votes).
Congratulations Mary, and thank you to everyone who participated! You can check out the pictures below:
A neuron filled with red fluorescent protein (RFP) and GFP tagged Farp1, which localizes to spines where connections to other neurons form. Contributed by Andrew C. from Neuroscience.
Heterogeneity of mitochondrial membrane potential in a population of murine chondrocytes (red=greater membrane polarization). Contributed by Judi H. from CMDB
An enteroid supernova. Contributed by Mary H. from Microbiology.
GABAergic inhibitory neurons (parvalbumin+ basket cells, red) in the mouse dentate gyrus, an important structure for learning and memory. Contributed by Matt K. from Neuroscience.
Growth of human luminal (red) and basal (green) mammary epithelial cells in 3D hydrogels. Contributed by Jess E. from CMDB.
Auto-fluorescence from the internal elastic lamina: how scientific aggravation becomes art. Contributed by Jess D-K. from CMDB.
The normal & the pathological – Disorganization in breast tissue architecture during carcinogenesis. Contributed by Nafis H. from CMDB.
There is always light in the darkness. (CD3 (green) and tdTomato (red) as a lineage trace in a mouse lymph node). Contributed by Linus W. from Immunology.
Human mammary epithelial cells pull and twist rat-tail collagen fibers during their formation into a hollow duct-like structure. Contributed by Michael S. from Genetics.
Making the best of a bad western. Contributed by Rana A. from PDD.
Monday Blues – Screening One-Bead-One-Compound Peptide Libraries. Contributed by Rob C. from CMDB.